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Environmental Justice: From
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321
EG41CH13-Agyeman ARI 30 September 2016 13:29
Contents
INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
FOUNDATIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MOVEMENT:
ACTIONS, ACTIVISTS, AND ORGANIZATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
EVOLUTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE METHODOLOGY AND
MULTIPLE INTERPRETATIONS OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE . . . . . . 326
EXPANSION AND GLOBALIZATION OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL
JUSTICE MOVEMENT AND PARADIGM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
EMERGING THEMES IN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330
Practice and Materiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330
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The agreement reached notes the importance of impacts on the most vulnerable, on indigenous
peoples, on small island states, and on future generations. Equity is a key principle throughout, and
the importance of climate justice is explicitly noted. Clearly, much more needs to be done to attain
anything resembling justice as we experience and respond to climate change, but the discourses
of environmental justice (EJ) and climate justice have become central motivating factors for, and
organizing themes of, the agreement.
The point of these two opening examples—major stories in late 2015 and early 2016—is to
illustrate that the concept of EJ continues to be relevant to our everyday lives, reaching from
tainted tap water in one city to the single most important international policy agreement of this
young century. What we offer here is an update on the story of the theory and practice of EJ,
following up on a previous review by Mohai et al. (5) from the 2009 volume of this journal. The
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authors reviewed works “on the quantitative complexity of documenting environmental injustice,
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on critical race theories that should be included in any broader conceptual discussion of this issue,
on case studies, on the history and politics of environmental justice policy making in the United
States and on international climate justice” (5, p. 408). Today, we have an additional seven years
of research in these and new, fresh branches of EJ theory and practice.
This article begins with a review and synthesis that lays out some of the key theory, scholars, case
examples, debates, methods, and (multiple) interpretations of EJ, such as just sustainabilities, as
well as the expansion and globalization of EJ. The original themes and concerns of EJ activists and
academics continue to be central to EJ discourses. We then look to some newly emerging themes,
actions, and strategies for EJ and just sustainabilities. First, we focus on the practices and materials
of everyday life, illustrated by food and energy movements. Second, we interrogate ongoing work
on community and the importance of identity and attachment, informed by urban planning, food,
and climate concerns. Third, we assess the growing interest in the relationship between human
practices and communities, on the one hand, and nonhuman nature, on the other. We also expand
on the longstanding interest in just sustainabilities within this movement, illustrated by a wide
range of concerns with food, energy, and climate justice. These new areas of work illustrate both
recent developments and a set of paths forward for both the theory and practice of EJ.
Toxic Wastes was fundamental to the demands, development, and profile of the environmen-
tal justice movement (EJM). Empowered by the data, impacted communities demanded more
power and recognition, activists laid the foundation for the Principles of EJ, and the movement
made recommendations for EJ integration into government agencies and environmental law. The
authors of Toxic Wastes established a precedent for community empowerment and stated their in-
tent that the report “better enable the victims of this insidious form of racism not only to become
more aware of the problem, but also to participate in the formation of viable strategies” (8, p. x).
The report’s preface also foreshadows the fundamental Principles of EJ that would be codified
by the 1991 First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit (8). The execu-
tive summary of Toxic Wastes reads as though the EJM of 1987 was well formed, coherent, and
cohesive. In reality, the movement was far more nascent, but the document reads as deliberately
aspirational. And so, unsurprisingly, many recommendations of Toxic Wastes set an agenda for the
EJM of the late 1980s and early 1990s. When considered retrospectively, several EJM milestones
originated as recommendations in this document (see Table 1).
This is not to suggest that all of the UCC’s recommendations were adopted during that period,
that all have been realized today, or even that these advancements have been protected and continue
today; the point is simply to note the power and influence of this single UCC document on the
history of EJ in the United States. In contrast, Bullard et al. (9) assert that during the 2000s the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) undermined—or even attacked—the EJ Principles and
policies established in the 1990s, including failing to implement President Clinton’s Executive
Order 12898 or apply Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. EJ lawyer and author Luke Cole, a major
participant in the early years of the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC),
later lamented that the EPA did not implement any of its formal recommendations (quoted in
10, p. 66). Moving beyond even symbolic action by federal agencies is an ongoing struggle for the
EJM; it was not until July 2007 that the US Senate Subcommittee on Superfund and Environmental
Health held the first ever Senate hearing on EJ (9). At the state level, and that of the regional
EPA offices, there has been both very limited, if problematic, progress—for example, in California
climate legislation (11)—and ingrained resistance to change (12).
In the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s, African American communities mo-
bilized and coalesced around anti-waste and antidumping campaigns, became experts on toxics,
and successfully linked the issue to housing, transportation, air quality, and economic develop-
ment (13). Native American, Latino, and Asian Pacific Islander communities concurrently fought
for EJ in their communities (14). Indigenous activists in the United States have confronted and
continue to combat infringement and desecration of sacred sites; land appropriation and threats
to sovereignty; as well as loss of traditional fishing, hunting, and gathering rights (15–17). These
efforts were strengthened by the establishment of the Indigenous Environmental Network in
1990. Native American communities in the United States continue to battle environmental injus-
tices as the construction of uranium mines, nuclear waste sites, military development and nuclear
testing, and oil and gas pipelines are presented as economic development opportunities. US and
Canadian First Nations also face disproportionate consequences of climate change (18). These
issues showcase how the EJM is concerned not only with distributional equity with respect to
disproportionate environmental “bads” but also with the lack of respect for, and basic recognition
of, indigenous ways of life (19).
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Chicano and Latino communities have also long pioneered EJ activism; much of the focus
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has been on health and occupational safety, especially the issue of farmworker and community
exposure to pesticides (20, 21). Pesticides had been a concern of the mainstream environmental
movement but had focused on protecting wildlife, wilderness, and consumers. By contrast, the
(largely Chicano/Latino) United Farm Workers’ Organizing Committee focused primarily on
farmworker exposure (20). Latino and Chicano activists have made critical contributions to the
EJM, including founding hundreds of local, regional, and multinational environmental justice
organizations (EJOs); helping to draft the Principles of EJ at the First National People of Color
Environmental Leadership Summit; campaigning against environmental racism in the EPA and the
Group of Ten mainstream environmental organizations; advocating for Executive Order 12898;
and representing Latino and Chicano concerns at NEJAC meetings (22). After several decades off
the radar, farmworker justice is again a rising concern in the EJM as farmworker health, safety, and
just compensation have experienced resurging attention by new advocates waving the banner of
food justice (23–25). Latino and Chicano EJ activists also campaign to correct the environmental
injustices experienced by industrial workers, heirs of land grant communities, acequia farmers, and
residents of rural colonias along the US–Mexico border (22). Latino and Latina EJ activists are
leaders in the shift to refocus the EJM from reactive protests against environmental injustices
to advocacy for sustainable and just alternatives addressing the political, economic, and social
injustices that perpetuate environmental racism (22).
It is essential to note—as do Chavis & Lee (8), Bullard (13), Taylor (26), and others—that
early EJ activists (mostly people of color and low-income people) were not members of the so-
called mainstream environmental organizations (whose membership is dominated by middle- and
upper-class whites); rather, EJ illustrates a broad array of environmental interests, tactics, and
discourses. In the seminal work Dumping in Dixie, Bullard (13) documented that environmental
equity was becoming a major issue on the civil rights agenda. Taylor (26) further argues that,
through collective identity formation in the civil rights movement, EJ not only became a major
civil rights issue, but also became integral to the civil rights identity. EJ tactics more closely
resembled civil rights actions—such as protests, rallies, sit-ins, and boycotts, often organized out
of churches—than mainstream environmental movement activities—such as membership drives
and lobbying campaigns (13).
Taylor (26) has meticulously constructed a narrative of the evolution of the environmental
justice paradigm (EJP) and its antecedent paradigms or discourses. Although each paradigm de-
parts significantly from its predecessor, no paradigm began tabula rasa. Therefore, the EJP bears
imprints of what has been called the new environmental paradigm, which was built atop the ear-
lier romantic environmental paradigm. Significantly, the EJP is the first environmental discourse
constructed by people of color and is “framed around concepts like autonomy, self-determination,
access to resources, fairness and justice, and civil and human rights,” all of which had been absent
from mainstream (white, male, wealthy) environmental discourses (26, p. 534). The EJP explicitly
links the environment to race, class, gender, and social justice, effectively reframing environmental
issues as injustice issues. Crucially, the EJM did not insist on a singular paradigm, or a hierarchical
mode of organizing; rather, the movement has been pluralist in its concepts, foci, strategies, and
actions from the beginning (27). Consequently, the EJM recruited and resonated with a wide
range of new constituencies, including people of color and working- and middle-class whites (26).
EJOs have long been multipurpose social justice organizations (13, 26, 28), often working in
coalition to fight for both environmental sustainability and socioeconomic equality and justice (13).
However, the emerging popular discourse of environmental sustainability, while gaining ground
in policy and planning circles in the 1990s after the Earth Summit, was conspicuously absent from
much of the EJ discourse, both community and academic. Indeed, one commentator noted “those
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in the environmental justice movement were suspicious even though what environmental justice
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folks were doing was very akin to or had strong elements of sustainability but to identify in that
way was problematic for them” (29, p. 173). Yet, even though sustainability may have been a no-go
within EJOs at that time, coalitions and collaborations between EJOs and religious, community,
and green or sustainability groups lent strength of reputation, as well as community resources and
social capital, and have been a significant factor in the successes of EJMs (26, 28, 29).
An excellent example of this broad coalition building is Clean Buses for Boston in the late
1990s (29). It was a coalition of EJOs with green/sustainability, religious, community, and other
organizations that worked to force the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority to get rid of dirty
diesels and invest in 350 compressed natural gas buses. In many ways, the Clean Buses for Boston
coalition exemplified the emerging concepts of just sustainabilities (30) and the later emergence
of the just sustainabilities paradigm and just sustainabilities index (29). Just sustainabilities can be
thought of as a counterbalance, an infusion of ideas of equity and justice into a discourse whose sole
focus at that time was on environmental sustainability. The argument, put simply, was “sustain-
ability cannot be simply a ‘green’, or ‘environmental’ concern, important though ‘environmental’
aspects of sustainability are. A truly sustainable society is one where wider questions of social needs
and welfare, and economic opportunity are integrally related to environmental limits imposed by
supporting ecosystems” (28, p. 2). As social movement organizations expanded their agendas to
include EJ issues, their collective identity also subsumed these causes in such a way that “to main-
tain their credibility in communities of color, they had to adopt the environmental justice identity
also” (26, p. 551).
distance-based methods not only corroborate the claims of Toxic Wastes but also indicate greater
racial disparities in toxic exposure than earlier coincident methods had revealed (9, 33). Even
though continued studies over two decades strengthened the pool of evidence of inequitable
distribution of environmental hazards according to race, class, or both, ambiguity persisted as
to the magnitude of racial and socioeconomic disparities as well as the underlying causes or
mechanisms that perpetuate injustices (32–36).
In the mid-1990s, EJ research methods shifted from almost exclusively quantitative methods
to a more qualitative and interdisciplinary approach (18), which is evidenced by the publication of
EJ research in journals from a broader range of academic disciplines (35). This cross-disciplinary
debate has expanded EJ as a discipline to explore more methodologies, explanatory social theories,
epistemologies, and frameworks from social, economic, and historical disciplines (18, 21). In
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contrast to previous efforts to develop one definition of EJ and standardize one objective and
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comparable measure of injustice, more recent, critical EJ research addresses multiple meanings
and interpretations of the term as a point of interest and inquiry (18, 37).
The broadening and globalization of EJ framing has both necessitated and driven the diversi-
fication of EJ methodologies. The first generation of simple spatial analyses—with its vocabulary
of linear distance, zip codes, and census tracts—is insufficient and inadequate to assess EJ issues at
multidimensional transnational scales (38). Walker (38, p. 615) asserts the need for “spatialities of
different forms, of different things and working at different scales” to analyze three different con-
ceptions of justice: distributive, procedural, and recognition-based (37). Schlosberg (37) has called
for EJ methodology and theory to expand beyond the unequal distributions of impacts and/or
responsibilities to include the processes of disrespect, devaluation, degradation, or insult of some
people versus others; inclusion or exclusion in participation and procedure; and the provision and
protection of the basic capabilities or needs of everyday life (see also 39, 40). The geography of
distribution has been expanded to include “corporeogeographies” (38, p. 620). This enables con-
sideration of the physiological and psychosocial impacts of environmental injustices in a way that
responds to the appeal of Mohai et al. (5) for research into how environmental injustices relate
to racial and socioeconomic disparities in health and mortality. Procedural justice is a form of
spatial justice (41), in that a fair process allows for “a fluidity of movement of people, ideas and
perspectives across the boundaries of institutions and between differentiated elite and lay spaces,
creating open rather than constrained networks of interaction and deliberation” (38, p. 627).
Recognition is linked to spatial geographies through the stigmatization and devaluation of
places and—through the often-inextricable connection between individual/community identity
and place—to the people who inhabit those places (38). Some of this comes together as new
approaches to citizen science and the inclusion of local knowledge—participation in analysis of
the problem as well as in the political development of solutions (42, 43). And, as Ottinger (44)
has argued, it is crucial that these efforts include supporting proactive knowledge production in
affected communities. This, again, speaks to the implications of a broad EJ frame for what counts as
EJ activism, policy, and practice. Moreover, the multiple spatialities of recent EJ research challenge
and expand the original conception of distributive EJ and an objective, quantitative measure of
injustice. In many ways, this internal epistemic, theoretical, and methodological pluralism is the
catalyst for expansion of the EJ frame.
issues of disproportionate risk for toxic exposure well into and through the 1990s. However, the
1990s saw a broader range of issues in the EJM spotlight than is frequently acknowledged. Guided
by the iconic phrase “where we live, work, and play” (credited to Dana Alston in her address to the
first People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in 1991), EJ issues continued to diversify
(28, 37, 45). In 2000, Taylor (26) reported that EJOs whose leaders and members were people
of color were focused on the built environment (facilities siting, housing, parks and recreation);
worker health and safety; and waste, pollution, exposure, and toxics. Taylor (26) also criticized the
narrow characterization of EJ as being limited to the toxics issue as a failure to capture the broader
and more nuanced EJ themes of the 1990s. Additional critiques described EJ as largely reactive
and focused on threats to communities (toxics, locally unwanted land uses, poor transit), rather
than proactive and focused on policy and planning of desirable communities, e.g., sustainable
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communities, with adequate green spaces and play spaces (29). Nevertheless, the movement did
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actions or informed choices made by the same people who are affected by them, and those where
there is a dislocation between those benefiting from and suffering from patterns of distribution.”
Such dislocation arises in cases ranging from Warren County to Flint as well as in global EJ issues,
most notably with waste trade and climate change.
A key issue for which the EJ discourse has had a large influence is climate change, notably in how
social movements have organized around it and its impacts. Climate justice developed directly out
of the history and conceptualization of the EJ discourse (61, 62). Schlosberg & Collins (62) trace the
trajectory of climate justice out of the initial Principles of EJ, through to the development of princi-
ples of climate justice by international climate justice networks before, during, and after numerous
COP meetings of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. Since 2005 and in the after-
math of Hurricane Katrina, greater attention has turned to racial inequalities related to natural dis-
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asters and climate change (63). Climate inequalities exist within and between nations with respect
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to responsibility, vulnerability, and ability to negotiate effectively in global forums (64). Across
the globe, the communities most affected by climate change are poor coastal, island, farming, and
pastoral, as well as developing nations generally, which are least responsible for the emissions that
destabilize the climate (60, 64, 65). The urban poor also experience heightened vulnerability to
extreme weather and environmental hazards resulting from climate change (64). As the impacts
of climate change are more acutely felt around the world, climate justice has become a dominant
thread of the EJM that interweaves many subthemes (40, 62, 66–68). Climate justice has become
a major outlet for the EJ discourse around climate negotiations, as it helps to frame the inequity
between north and south, developed and developing nations, major emitters and those most vul-
nerable to climate change (69); the idea was central to discussions at the 2015 Paris COP meeting.
The expansion of climate justice is one illustration of the growing global influence of the
broader EJ discourse; we also see a growing concern with EJ in a wide range of national and global
environmental organizations and, increasingly, in mainstream environmental nongovernmental
organizations. In contrast to global mainstream environmental organizations, international EJOs
tend to be multipurpose with an emphasis on human rights and social justice; EJ and climate
justice have increasingly become central to their discourses. The global EJM operates on differ-
ent scales to include local, regional, and national EJOs as well as transnational social movement
organizations (57). The latter often have the highest profile and influence in international negoti-
ations, stakeholder meetings, and congresses and parliaments. However, domestic local, regional,
and national EJOs are the critical frontline fighters whose affiliations with transnational social
movement organizations lend credibility and ground the latter organizations and their efforts in
the experiences and issues of communities and activists on the ground (57). Many groups that
use EJ as an organizing theme in the global realm are informed by not only the history of EJ
in the United States but also a range of conceptions of what Martinez-Alier (70) has long called
“environmentalism of the poor.”
In addition, we have seen growing alliances between EJ and indigenous rights organizations,
especially around the impacts of climate change; climate justice has long included attention to
the particular impacts of climate change on indigenous communities and ways of life. Indigenous
justice as a theme in the global EJM encompasses many of the original concerns of tribal EJ
advocates in the United States and illustrates how their insistence on a broad indigenous voice
has taken hold in the movement (71, 72). Native peoples around the world fight exploitation
and/or displacement due to natural resource extraction as well as disproportionate consequences
of global climate change. Unfortunately, these struggles are often invisible to or overlooked by
the global community unless they grow into violent conflicts (16). Both the reality of the problems
faced by indigenous peoples and this relative invisibility reflect the devaluing of native peoples and
their relationships with traditional lands (19, 58, 73). Growing inclusion of indigenous concerns
in EJ and, especially, climate justice movements, actions, and demands illustrates the increased
importance of such recognition within the broader movement.
The fact that primarily northern degrowth groups, as well as major northern environmental
nongovernmental organizations such as Greenpeace, have adopted conceptions of EJ and climate
justice from the south and indigenous advocates indicates both the resonance of the ideas and
the increasing recognition of the importance and validity of these discourses. Globalization of
the EJ discourse is not a one-way affair, from the United States and north outward. Instead, it is
increasingly and interactively global (57, 74).
Given the conceptual, spatial, and international expansion of the EJ discourse, movements labeled
with a justice appellation have proliferated (e.g., climate justice, indigenous justice, food justice,
energy justice). Each of these movements unite under the umbrella of social justice and borrow
from the wide range of conceptions of justice in the EJ framework (6). This proliferation speaks to
the adaptability of the EJM, opportunities for it to respond to new environmental injustices (26),
and the reality that EJ is a pluralistic discourse (37, 52). That said, as the recent case of negligent
lead poisoning of the water system in Flint, Michigan, illustrates (see Introduction and Overview),
the original concerns of EJ activists around the racial and class underpinnings of environmental
contamination will continue to be a central focus of EJ organizing around the world.
Although the continuing and broadening focus of the EJ frame or discourse ties contemporary
movements with the origins of the EJM, we see some key developments since the review of Mohai
et al. (5). Three central theoretical and topical evolutions in recent EJ practice and scholarship
include (a) focus on the materials and practices of everyday life, illustrated by food and energy
movements; (b) ongoing work on community and the importance of attachment, informed by urban
planning as well as food and climate concerns; and (c) growing interest in the relationship between
human practices and communities and nonhuman nature, expanding on the longstanding interest
in just sustainabilities within the EJM and illustrated by a wide range of concerns with food, energy,
and climate justice. Each of these developments speaks to the expanding sphere of application of
the EJ frame. Climate justice, indigenous justice, food justice, and the rise of community energy
and energy justice, for example, offer opportunities to better articulate, and perhaps reform, the
boundaries of EJ scholarship and praxis. Crucially, the EJ frame also continues to expand not
only topically but also geographically and disciplinarily. More generally, as our environment is
increasingly disrupted by a highly neoliberal and capitalized world marked by increasing inequality
and vulnerability, we ask how EJ scholarship can be rearticulated and used to challenge, respond
to, and rework the rapidly changing environmental, economic, social, and political contexts of our
communities.
chain—inequalities that play out on local, national, and global scales and overlap with other major
EJ themes such as toxics, health disparities, indigenous justice, and climate change (77–79). Key
areas of inquiry include food access, food security, and food sovereignty, which connect to “health,
globalization, worker rights and working conditions, disparities regarding access to environmental
(or food) goods, land use and respect for the land, and, ultimately, how our production, trans-
portation, distribution, and consumptions systems are organized” (76, p. 7). Locally, we have seen
tremendous growth in the number of community gardens and urban farms, responses to food
deserts, and economic development initiatives around food, such as Detroit’s food movement
(78, 80, 81). Internationally, Via Campesina (the International Peasants Movement) and Brazil’s
Landless Workers Movement embody the marriage of EJ, human rights, and food movements to
combat environmental, social, and food injustices (82).
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Food represents just one way that everyday practices are increasingly finding their way into
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the field, in both the EJM and theories about it. This is not to say that a food movement that
focuses on a material practice of everyday life will always prioritize justice themes. Agyeman
(83), for example, challenges the “reification of ‘the local’” (p. 59), that is, the notable absence of
just sustainabilities concerns in much of the popular discourse surrounding local food systems.
He argues that concerns relating to the ability of people of color, immigrants, and low-income
populations to produce, access, and consume healthy and culturally appropriate foods are necessary
if the food justice movement is to connect with ongoing EJ concerns. Building on this, Agyeman
(83, p. 63) argues that “the framing of the local food movement in popular discourse has often
confused the ends, which are a more sustainable and socially just food system, with the means: the
localization of food production and consumption. In other words, the goal has sometimes become
the creation of a local food system, rather than the creation of a more sustainable and just food
system using localization as the means.” Born & Purcell (84, pp. 195–96) term this situation “the
local trap,” noting that “no matter what its scale, the outcomes of a food system are contextual:
they depend on the actors and agendas that are empowered by the social relations in a given food
system.”
And yet, we do see a discourse of justice, community, and resistance to power in such move-
ments. Recently, Schlosberg & Coles (85, p. 161) argued that a whole range of recent envi-
ronmental organizing is focused on “new materialism,” or “a concern with power, politics, and
sustainability represented in the materials and flows through both human and nonhuman commu-
nities.” These movements, which include not only food movements but also community energy
and maker/crafter movements, are focused on replacing unsustainable practices and forging alter-
native, productive, and sustainable institutions at local and regional levels to reconstruct everyday
interactions with the rest of the natural world. It is a politics of the sustainability of everyday life
in the way we provide for basic human needs, represented, for example, in the development of
new institutions and flows around food and energy—thus, just sustainabilities based in everyday
practice. Many food justice movements (see, in particular, 77, 86) are concerned not only about
a range of conceptions and practices of EJ and just sustainabilities but also with restructuring the
unsustainable material flows that contribute to those environmental injustices.
Focus on the materiality of everyday life is not new to EJ; many parts of the EJM have long
focused on the circulation and infusion of toxins into the bodies of women, children, and people
of color (87–89) and have been attentive to the fact that these groups remain disproportionately
excluded from circulations of healthy food (78). Gabrielson & Parady (90) bring together EJ and
feminist theorizing to reconceptualize the idea of environmental citizenship to draw attention
specifically to the body and how we are embedded in different social and ecological contexts that
condition our everyday lives. In this way, the material life of the body is seen as fully entangled
with questions of social justice, providing a stronger foundation for an intersectional politics of
alliance building between environmental and EJ movements; between the global north and south;
and across the racial, cultural, sexual, and gender boundaries that mark bodies.
The point here is that things, stuff, and our material lives have power and are invariably con-
nected to the way that environmental injustice is produced, experienced, reproduced, and resisted.
Rather than merely protest the injustice of existing flows of material and power (which remains
crucial), movement groups are also increasingly stepping in to redesign and take control of the
flow of food, energy, and the basic needs of everyday life. Politically, that means stepping outside
of problematic and unjust flows—industrialized food systems that discriminate against poor com-
munities or a fossil fuel industry that contaminates indigenous peoples’ lands and communities and
creates the vulnerabilities of climate change. Theoretically, such action insists that we shift away
from traditional notions of environment—“the indifferent stuff of a world ‘out there’, articulated
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through notions of ‘land’, ‘nature’ or ‘environment’, to the intimate fabric of corporeality that
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includes and redistributes the ‘in here’ of human being” (91, p. 602). Accordingly, many EJM ac-
tivists continue to problematize, expand, and push for a broader understanding of the relationship
between environment and human practices (see Human and Nonhuman Assemblages and Just
Sustainabilities, section below).
p. 756) note, “the cultural landscape perspective shows us how landscapes can become racialized,
shifting the scale of environmental injustice from the home, the factory or the neighborhood
to entire landscapes.” However, care must be taken when looking for design solutions to what
are essentially human and structural problems. As Wood & Landry (99, p. 260) point out, “the
intercultural city depends on more than a design challenge. It derives from a central notion
that people are developing a shared future whereby each individual feels they have something to
contribute in shaping, making and cocreating a joint endeavor. A thousand tiny transformations
will create an atmosphere in public space that feels open and where all feel safe and valued.”
The notion of sharing has recently been investigated by McLaren & Agyeman (100). They
make a “case for moving beyond the bounded and ultimately limiting concept of the ‘sharing
economy’ to both understanding whole cities as shared spaces, and acting to share them fairly”
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(100, p. 4). In this way, Agyeman et al. (101, p. 1) argue, “a reinvention and revival of sharing
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in our cities could enhance equity, rebuild community and dramatically cut resource use. With
modern technologies the intersection of urban space and cyber-space provides an unsurpassed
platform for more just, inclusive and environmentally efficient economies and societies rooted
in a sharing culture.” Although most of the sharing economy literature carefully sidesteps issues
of equity and justice, the sharing cities concept “represents yet another powerful expression of
‘just sustainabilities’—the idea that there is no universal ‘green’ pathway to sustainability, that
sustainability is context-specific but justice is an intrinsic element in any coherent route” (100, p. 3).
We also see a powerful and growing critique of environmental improvements/renewal and
its links to gentrification, displacement, and homelessness developing in EJ and just sustainabil-
ities scholarship and activism. Via Twitter on December 21, 2015, Agyeman asked, “how do we
decouple neighborhood sustainability measures like complete streets, cycling, walkability from
gentrification, displacement?” There are many different responses to this, including Dooling
(102, p. 630), who, in regard to homeless people in Seattle’s public green spaces, observed that
“ecological gentrification is a provocative term that highlights the contradictions that emerge
between an ecological rationality and its associated environmental ethics, and the production of
injustices for politically and economically vulnerable people.” Curran & Hamilton (103, p. 1028),
however, advocate for a “‘just green enough’ strategy [that] organises for cleanup and green space
aimed at the existing working-class population and industrial land users, not at new develop-
ment. Activists in Greenpoint want to achieve the cleanup of Newtown Creek while maintaining
its industrial base, a strategy designed to put a stop to speculative development attracted to a
neighbourhood experiencing environmental improvements.”
Taking food establishments as her cue, Anguelovski (104, p. 1) argues that “data analysis shows
that environmental goods in the forms of ‘natural’ healthy food stores are perceived by activists
as new incarnations of environmental gentrification and ‘environmental privilege’,” that is, the
exclusive access that whiter and wealthier residents have to prime environmental amenities (parks,
woodland, etc.) and to exclusive green neighborhoods, thereby triggering heightened feelings of
erasure and displacement.
We see the connection among EJ and identity, community, space, place, attachment, and, ul-
timately, displacement as a core, and ongoing, development in the literature. As Anguelovski (50,
p. 198) notes, “place identity originates in people’s relationship to the physical, political, and envi-
ronmental world around them and is also shaped by the experiences and interactions with others.”
This statement has two key dimensions, both requiring examination. First, people are attached
and connected to places, and these attachments form components of their identity. Second, these
attachments are relational; that is, they exist through and in community. Anguelovski’s notion of
the “other” is human, but it need not be. The relational dimension of place attachment, in our
view, can and should be expanded to include the nonhuman material world.
Recently, Groves (105) has taken these foundations and shown how the “colonization of attach-
ment” to place can be conceptualized as an environmental injustice. According to his argument, if
attachment is a constitutive part of how people inhabit particular environments, then disrupting
those attachments can do damage to both individual and collective well-being. Harms to attach-
ment erode “forms of agency embedded in attachments to place and collectives” (105, p. 870),
resulting in people losing “a sense of themselves as doers and actors” (p. 858). This rupture of res-
idents’ identities has marked effects, essentially taking away their capacity to “negotiat[e] a future
for themselves and their children” (106, p. 9). In thinking about climate change and relocation,
Agyeman and colleagues (107, p. 509) argue that adaptation needs to look beyond the “ecological,
technical, and economic [or] physical aspects of relocation” and examine place attachment, the
“important psychological, symbolic, and particularly emotional aspects of healthy human habi-
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tat.” Our argument here is that EJ and just sustainabilities scholarship is increasingly taking into
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account the importance of places, and place attachment, to understand the spatial and cultural
dimensions of environmental injustices. Such attachment can be seen as a basic human need, a
crucial element of well-being, or a capability; undermining it, then, constitutes an injustice.
These theoretical developments have important implications for EJ organizing. Rekindling
attachment to place, place-making, and community development can be seen as a tactic for
EJ activists. Anguelovski (50, 108) shows that environmental revitalization projects in Boston,
Barcelona, and Havana are place-based EJ struggles. Moreover, she argues that government or-
ganizations should ensure that dimensions of the environment such as community, attachment,
and identity are not relegated to the background of urban planning efforts. Her broader point is
that EJ activists should think about their activism in terms of place—so, too, we argue, should EJ
scholars and community planners. Put another way, “environmental justice has physical and psy-
chosocial dimensions and . . . environmental recovery is achieved by overcoming environmental
trauma” (50, p. 211). This trauma, in the words of Groves (105), should be called out for what it
is: the “colonization of attachment.”
However, some scholars, such as Nixon (109), for example, are skeptical of the political value
of place attachment for advancing environmental concerns. He argues that the emotional power
it generates can be a valuable resource, but it has no inherent politics. Regardless, the point
remains that EJ scholarship is coming to interrogate the “where” in environment, expanding its
definitional and theoretical boundaries to acknowledge that EJ is about addressing physical and
psychosocial health and connecting that understanding to place-making, place attachment, and
identity (community).
Concerns with materiality, place, and EJ find themselves increasingly interconnected to broader
concerns about environmental sustainability and the integrity of the nonhuman world. We see this
most thoroughly in the growing body of work on climate justice, energy justice, and food justice.
Hurricane Katrina solidified the confluence between the EJ framework and climate change: The
hurricane and the EJ community’s responses to it helped to expand consideration of a climate-
changing environment within the EJM. EJ scholars and advocates began to see the impacts of
climate change as yet another environmental condition that demonstrates the broader social injus-
tice experienced by poor and minority communities. Once again, already vulnerable communities
experienced an environmental bad in more damaging ways.
Yet, after Katrina, there was an important shift in perception. Before the hurricane, EJ or-
ganizing in New Orleans had focused on a large set of environmental and social indicators of
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discrimination and vulnerability (110), but afterward, EJ activists also addressed other impacts of
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the emissions emanating from the smokestacks of Cancer Alley. These emissions not only fell on
local communities but also contributed to broader greenhouse emissions that had caused the Gulf
to warm and that had strengthened the hurricane.
Many EJ groups also began to address the ecological damage done to ecosystems such as
wetlands—damage that led to the increased vulnerability of both human and nonhuman com-
munities. As Schlosberg & Collins (62) argue, there is a growing recognition in the EJM since
Katrina that what happens to the environment is not merely another symptom of existing social
injustice, along with poverty, health issues, and substandard housing. Instead, the relationship be-
tween environment and justice is more complex and interrelated: A poor environment is not only
a symptom of existing injustice; rather, a functioning environment provides the necessary con-
ditions to achieve social justice. This is another expression of the concept of just sustainabilities.
Thus, from Detroit to Delhi, food justice advocates are simultaneously concerned with address-
ing food deserts, autonomy, and economic opportunities for communities, on the one hand, and
sustainability and less ecologically damaging practices, on the other. Energy justice advocates are
motivated by both community empowerment and the human impacts on global ecosystems (111,
112). And climate justice activists are focused on the impacts and vulnerabilities of communities
to climate change as well as on ways that just adaptation policies can address both human and
nonhuman elements in those communities.
Theoretically, the conceptions of justice at work in these newer elements and foci of EJ
organizing continue to build on the pluralist foundations discussed by Schlosberg (27, 37), Walker
(86), and others. For example, recent work by Bulkeley (67, 68) on urban climate justice applies
and builds on work emphasizing that recognition, distribution, and participation are all key in
actualizing a just, adaptable, and sustainable city. Whether focused on food, energy, or climate,
our argument is that approaches must understand injustices in multiple and interconnected ways.
Walker & Day (86, p. 74) explicitly take up this call, noting that “invoking the injustice of fuel
poverty in multi-dimensional terms we should be fully aware of its location within an extended
network of social and environmental justice concerns, connecting the local with the global.”
More connections are also being made between these types of demands for justice and the
recently updated United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (113), which read like
an institutional agenda for just sustainabilities. Once again, this shows a connection between
a broadly conceptualized capabilities approach to justice and a pluralistic definition of EJ (see
also 114). As Walker (38, p. 205) claims, capabilities has “an internal pluralism, incorporates a
diversity of necessary forms of justice, rather than privileging only one, and retains flexibility in
how functionings and flourishings are to be secured.” Although not all movement groups or issues
address all these types of justice or all these concerns, the concepts and practices of EJ are open
to, and encompass, varied notions of justice as they apply to given contexts and concerns. Tying
together the two themes of this section, we see this pluralist approach to EJ applied to both human
communities and the nonhuman realm—in practical policy proposals around food, energy, and
adaptation and in attempts to make theoretical connections between the two realms (115).
CONCLUSION
Twenty five years ago—a year before the UN Conference on Environment and Development (The
Rio, or Earth, Summit; see 8)—300 African Americans, Native Americans/First Nations people,
Latinos, and Asian Americans from all 50 US states plus Puerto Rico, Canada, Central and South
America, and the Marshall Islands attended the First National People of Color Environmental
Leadership Summit in Washington, DC. Together, they developed the original Principles of
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Environmental Justice. At that time, they could not have imagined the power, impact, resilience,
Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. 2016.41:321-340. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org
and theoretical, methodological, practical, and geographic range of their efforts. As they sowed
the seeds of a new discourse and paradigm about the relationship between justice and where we
live, work, and play, they could not have known the inspiration that they would afford future
generations of researchers, policy makers, and activists worldwide.
From its beginning in analyzing the inequitable dumping on poor and minority communities
in the United States, to its broad application across a range of issues, countries, and scales, EJ
has thrived as a rallying cry, a motivator, and a powerful idea. We see a flourishing richness in
the EJ paradigm and the allied concept of just sustainabilities, with branches into food, energy,
climate, urban planning, gentrification, and displacement, among others. EJ is employed to analyze
existing injustices that, unfortunately, continue to impact the lives of the most vulnerable—as in
Flint, Michigan, and worldwide. The concept is also increasingly used to reframe new issues,
concerns, and practices that can, we hope, help to bring attention to the crucial relationship
between a functioning environment and the attainment of social justice for all.
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
The authors are not aware of any affiliations, memberships, funding, or financial holdings that
might be perceived as affecting the objectivity of this review.
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Annual Review of
Environment
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Contents
Volume 41, 2016 I. Integrative Themes and Emerging Concerns
Environmental Issues in Central Africa
Katharine Abernethy, Fiona Maisels, and Lee J.T. White p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 1
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vi
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Contents vii
EG41-FrontMatter ARI 29 September 2016 17:40
Indexes
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viii Contents